At that time the camp was new.
Most of what was called the valuable property was
owned by an English syndicate, but there were many
who had small claims scattered here and there on the
mountainside, and Three-fingered Hoover and I were
rightly reckoned among these others. The camp
was new and rough to the degree of uncouthness, yet,
upon the whole, the little population was well disposed
and orderly. But along in the spring of ’81,
finding that we numbered eight hundred, with electric
lights, telephones, a bank, a meeting-house, a race-track,
and such-like modern improvements, we of Red Hoss
Mountain became possessed of the notion to have a
city government; so nothing else would do but to proceed
at once and solemnly to the choice of a mayor, marshal,
clerk, and other municipal officers. The spirit
of party politics (as it is known and as it controls
things elsewhere) did not enter into the short and
active canvass; there were numerous candidates for
each office, all were friends, and the most popular
of the lot were to win. The campaign was fervent
but good-natured.
I shall venture to say that Jim Woppit
would never have been elected city marshal but for
the potent circumstance that several of the most influential
gentlemen in the camp were in love with Jim’s
sister; that was Jim’s hold on these influences,
and that was why he was elected.
Yet Jim was what you ’d call
a good fellow-not that he was fair to look
upon, for he was not; he was swarthy and heavy-featured
and hulking; but he was a fair-speaking man, and he
was always ready to help out the boys when they went
broke or were elsewise in trouble. Yes, take
him all in all, Jim Woppit was properly fairly popular,
although, as I shall always maintain, he would never
have been elected city marshal over Buckskin and Red
Drake and Salty Boardman if it had n’t been (as
I have intimated) for the backing he got from Hoover,
Jake Dodsley, and Barber Sam. These three men
last named were influences in the camp, enterprising
and respected citizens, with plenty of sand in their
craws and plenty of stuff in their pockets; they loved
Miss Woppit, and they were in honor bound to stand
by the interests of the brother of that fascinating
young woman.
I was not surprised that they were
smitten; she might have caught me, too, had it not
been for the little woman and the three kids back in
the states. As handsome and as gentle a lady
was Miss Woppit as ever walked a white pine floor-so
very different from White River Ann, and Red Drake’s
wife, and old man Edgar’s daughter, for they
were magpies who chattered continually and maliciously,
hating Miss Woppit because she wisely chose to have
nothing to do with them. She lived with her brother
Jim on the side-hill, just off the main road, in the
cabin that Smooth Ephe Hicks built before he was thrown
off his broncho into the gulch. It was
a pretty but lonesome place, about three-quarters of
a mile from the camp, adjoining the claim which Jim
Woppit worked in a lazy sort of way-Jim
being fairly well fixed, having sold off a coal farm
in Illinois just before he came west.
In this little cabin abode Miss Woppit
during the period of her wooing, a period covering,
as I now recall, six or, may be, eight months.
She was so pretty, so modest, so diligent, so homekeeping,
and so shy, what wonder that those lonely, heart-hungry
men should fall in love with her? In all the
population of the camp the number of women was fewer
than two score, and of this number half were married,
others were hopeless spinsters, and others were irretrievably
bad, only excepting Miss Woppit, the prettiest, the
tidiest, the gentlest of all. She was good, pure,
and lovely in her womanliness; I shall not say that
I envied-no, I respected Hoover and Dodsley
and Barber Sam for being stuck on the girl; you ’d
have respected ’em, too, if you ’d seen
her and-and them. But I did
take it to heart because Miss Woppit seemed disinclined
to favor any suit for her fair hand-particularly
because she was by no means partial to Three-fingered
Hoover, as square a man as ever struck pay dirt-dear
old pardner, your honest eyes will never read these
lines, between which speaks my lasting love for you!
In the first place, Miss Woppit would
never let the boys call on her of an evening unless
her brother Jim was home; she had strict notions about
that sort of thing which she would n’t waive.
I reckon she was right according to the way society
looks at these things, but it was powerful hard on
Three-fingered Hoover and Jake Dodsley and Barber Sam
to be handicapped by etiquette when they had their
bosoms chock full of love and were dying to tell the
girl all about it.
Jake Dodsley came a heap nearer than
the others to letting Miss Woppit know what his exact
feelings were. He was a poet of no mean order.
What he wrote was printed regularly in Cad Davis’
Leadville paper under the head of “Pearls of
Pegasus,” and all us Red Hoss Mountain folks
allowed that next to Willie Pabor of Denver our own
Jake Dodsley had more of the afflatus in him than
any other living human poet. Hoover appreciated
Jake’s genius, even though Jake was his
rival. It was Jake’s custom to write poems
at Miss Woppit-poems breathing the
most fervid sentiment, all about love and bleeding
hearts and unrequited affection. The papers
containing these effusions he would gather together
with rare diligence, and would send them, marked duly
with a blue or a red pencil, to Miss Woppit.
The poem which Hoover liked best was
one entitled “True Love,” and Hoover committed
it to memory-yes, he went even further;
he hired Professor De Blanc (Casey’s piano player)
to set it to music, and this office the professor
discharged nobly, producing a simple but solemn-like
melody which Hoover was wont to sing in feeling wise,
poor, dear, misguided fellow that he was! Seems
to me I can hear his big, honest, husky, voice lifted
up even now in rendition of that expression of his
passion:
Turrue love never dies-
Like a river flowin’
In its course it gathers force,
Broader, deeper growin’;
Strength’nin’ in the storms
’at come,
Triumphin’ in sorrer,
Till To-day fades away
In the las’ To-morrer.
Wot though Time flies?
Turrue love never dies!
Moreover, Three-fingered Hoover discoursed
deftly upon the fiddle; at obligates and things he
was not much, but at real music he could not be beat.
Called his fiddle “Mother,” because his
own mother was dead, and being he loved her and had
no other way of showing it, why, he named his fiddle
after her. Three-fingered Hoover was full of
just such queer conceits.
Barber Sam was another music genius;
his skill as a performer upon the guitar was one of
the marvels of the camp. Nor had he an indifferent
voice-Prof. De Blanc allowed that if
Barber Sam’s voice had been cultured at the
proper time-by which I suppose he meant
in youth-Barber Sam would undoubtedly have
become “one of the brightest constellations in
the operatic firmament.” Moreover, Barber
Sam had a winsome presence; a dapper body was he,
with a clear olive skin, soulful eyes, a noble mustache,
and a splendid suit of black curly hair. His
powers of conversation were remarkable-that
fact, coupled with his playing the guitar and wearing
plaid clothes, gave him the name of Barber Sam, for
he was not really a barber; was only just like one.
In the face of all their wooing, Miss
Woppit hardened her heart against these three gentlemen,
any one of whom the highest lady in the land might
have been proud to catch. The girl was not inclined
to affairs of the heart; she cared for no man but
her brother Jim. What seemed to suit her best
was to tend to things about the cabin-it
was called The Bower, the poet Jake Dodsley having
given it that name-to till the little garden
where the hollyhocks grew, and to stroll away by herself
on the hillside or down through Magpie Glen, beside
the gulch. A queer, moodful creature she was;
unlike other girls, so far as we were able to judge.
She just doted on Jim, and Jim only-how
she loved that brother you shall know presently.
It was lucky that we organized a city
government when we did. All communities have
streaks of bad luck, and it was just after we had
elected a mayor, a marshal, and a full quota of officers
that Red Hoss Mountain had a spell of experiences
that seemed likely at one time to break up the camp.
There ’s no telling where it all would have
ended if we had n’t happened to have a corps
of vigilant and brave men in office, determined to
maintain law and order at all personal hazards.
With a camp, same as ’tis with dogs, it is
mighty unhealthy to get a bad name.
The tidal wave of crime-if
I may so term it-struck us three days after
the election. I remember distinctly that all
our crowd was in at Casey’s, soon after nightfall,
indulging in harmless pleasantries, such as eating,
drinking, and stud poker. Casey was telling how
he had turned several cute tricks on election day,
and his recital recalled to others certain exciting
experiences they had had in the states; so,
in an atmosphere of tobacco, beer, onions, wine, and
braggadocio, and with the further delectable stimulus
of seven-year-old McBrayer, the evening opened up
congenially and gave great promise. The boys
were convivial, if not boisterous. But Jim Woppit,
wearing the big silver star of his exalted office
on his coat-front, was present in the interests of
peace and order, and the severest respect was shown
to the newly elected representative of municipal dignity
and authority.
All of a sudden, sharp, exacting,
and staccato-like, the telephone sounded; seemed like
it said, “Quick-trouble-help!”
By the merest chance-a lucky chance-Jim
Woppit happened to be close by, and he reached for
the telephone and answered the summons.
“Yes.” “Where?” “You
bet-right away!”
That was what Jim said; of course,
we heard only one side of the talk. But we knew
that something-something remarkable had
happened. Jim was visibly excited; he let go
the telephone, and, turning around, full over against
us, he said, “By -, boys!
the stage hez been robbed!”
A robbery! The first in the
Red Hoss Mountain country! Every man leapt to
his feet and broke for the door, his right hand thrust
instinctively back toward his hip pocket. There
was blood in every eye.
Hank Eaves’ broncho was tied in front of
Casey’s.
“Tell me where to go,”
says Hank, “and I ’ll git thar in a minnit.
I ’m fixed.”
“No, Hank,” says Jim Woppit,
commanding like, “I ’ll go.
I ’m city marshal, an’ it’s my
place to go-I ‘m the repersentive
of law an’ order an’ I ’ll enforce
’em-damn me ef I don’t!”
“That’s bizness-Jim’s
head ’s level!” cried Barber Sam.
“Let Jim have the broncho,”
the rest of us counselled, and Hank had to give in,
though he hated to, for he was spoiling for trouble-cussedest
fellow for fighting you ever saw! Jim threw himself
astride the spunky little broncho and was off
like a flash.
“Come on, boys,” he called
back to us; “come on, ez fast ez you kin to
the glen!”
Of course we could n’t anywhere
near keep up with him; he was soon out of sight.
But Magpie Glen was only a bit away-just
a trifle up along the main road beyond the Woppit
cabin. Encouraged by the excitement of the moment
and by the whooping of Jake Dodsley, who opined (for
being a poet he always opined) that some evil might
have befallen his cherished Miss Woppit-incited
by these influences we made all haste. But Miss
Woppit was presumably safe, for as we hustled by The
Bower we saw the front room lighted up and the shadow
of Miss Woppit’s slender figure flitting to and
fro behind the white curtain. She was frightened
almost to death, poor girl!
It appeared from the story of Steve
Barclay, the stage-driver, that along about eight
o’clock the stage reached the glen-a
darkish, dismal spot, and the horses, tired and sweaty,
toiled almost painfully up the short stretch of rising
ground. There were seven people in the stage:
Mr. Mills, superintendent of the Royal Victoria mine;
a travelling man (or drummer) from Chicago, one Pryor,
an invalid tenderfoot, and four miners returning from
a round-up at Denver. Steve Barclay was the only
person outside. As the stage reached the summit
of the little hill the figure of a man stole suddenly
from the thicket by the roadside, stood directly in
front of the leading horses, and commanded a halt.
The movement was so sudden as to terrify the horses,
and the consequence was that, in shying, the brutes
came near tipping the coach completely over.
Barclay was powerless to act, for the assailant covered
him with two murderous revolvers and bade him throw
up his hands.
Then the men in the coach were ordered
out and compelled to disgorge their valuables, the
robber seeming to identify and to pay particular attention
to Mr. Mills, the superintendent, who had brought with
him from Denver a large sum of money. When the
miners made a slight show of resistance the assailant
called to his comrades in the bush to fire upon the
first man who showed fight; this threat induced a wise
resignation to the inevitable. Having possessed
himself in an incredibly short time of his booty,
the highwayman backed into the thicket and quickly
made off. The procedure from first to last occupied
hardly more than five minutes.
The victims of this outrage agreed
that the narrative as I have given it was in the main
correct. Barclay testified that he saw the barrels
of rifles gleaming from the thicket when the outlaw
called to his confederates. On the other hand,
Mr. Mills, who was the principal loser by the affair,
insisted that the outlaw did his work alone, and that
his command to his alleged accomplices was merely
a bluff. There was, too, a difference in the
description given of the highwayman, some of the party
describing him as a short, thick-set man, others asserting
that he was tall and slender. Of his face no
sight had been obtained, for he wore a half-mask and
a large slouch hat pulled well down over his ears.
But whatever dispute there may have been as to details,
one thing was sure-robbery had been done,
and the robber had fled with four gold watches and
cash to the amount of, say, two thousand five hundred
dollars.
Recovering betimes from their alarm
and bethinking themselves of pursuit of the outlaws,
the helpless victims proceeded to push into camp to
arouse the miners. It was then that Barclay discovered
that the tire of one of the front wheels had come
off in the jolt and wrench caused by the frightened
horses. As no time was to be lost, Barclay suggested
that somebody run down the road to Woppit’s
cabin and telephone to camp. Mr. Mills and the
Chicago drummer undertook this errand. After
considerable parley-for Miss Woppit wisely
insisted upon being convinced of her visitors’
honorable intentions-these two men were
admitted, and so the alarm was transmitted to Casey’s,
Miss Woppit meanwhile exhibiting violent alarm lest
her brother Jim should come to harm in pursuing the
fugitives.
As for Jim Woppit, he never once lost
his head. When the rest of us came up to the
scene of the robbery he had formed a plan of pursuit.
It was safe, he said, to take for granted that there
was a gang of the outlaws. They would undoubtedly
strike for Eagle Pass, since there was no possible
way of escape in the opposite direction, the gulch,
deep and wide, following the main road close into
camp. Ten of us should go with him-ten
of the huskiest miners mounted upon the stanchest bronchoes
the camp could supply. “We shall come
up with the hellions before mornin’,”
said he, and then he gritted his teeth significantly.
A brave man and a cool man, you ’ll allow;
good-hearted, too, for in the midst of all the excitement
he thought of his sister, and he said, almost tenderly,
to Three-fingered Hoover: “I can trust
you, pardner, I know. Go up to the cabin and
tell her it’s all right-that I ’ll
be back to-morrow and that she must n’t be skeered.
And if she is skeered, why, you kind o’ hang
round there to-night and act like you knew everything
was all O. K.”
“But may be Hoover ’ll
be lonesome,” suggested Barber Sam. He
was a sly dog.
“Then you go ’long too,”
said Jim Woppit. “Tell her I said so.”
Three-fingered Hoover would rather-a
good deal rather-have gone alone.
Yet, with all that pardonable selfishness, he recognized
a certain impropriety in calling alone at night upon
an unprotected female. So Hoover accepted, though
not gayly, of Barber Sam’s escort, and in a happy
moment it occurred to the twain that it might be a
pious idea to take their music instruments with them.
Hardly, therefore, had Jim Woppit and his posse flourished
out of camp when Three-fingered Hoover and Barber
Sam, carrying Mother and the famous guitar, returned
along the main road toward The Bower.
When the cabin came in view-the
cabin on the side hill with hollyhocks standing guard
round it-one of those subtle fancies in
which Barber Sam’s active brain abounded possessed
Barber Sam. It was to convey to Miss Woppit’s
ear good tidings upon the wings of music. “Suppose
we play ’All’s Well’?” suggested
Barber Sam. “That’ll let her know
that everything’s O. K.”
“Just the thing!” answered
Three-fingered Hoover, and then he added, and he meant
it: “Durned if you ain’t jest about
as slick as they make ’em, pardner!”
The combined efforts of the guitar
and Mother failed, however, to produce any manifestation
whatever, so far as Miss Woppit was concerned.
The light in the front room of the cabin glowed steadily,
but no shadow of the girl’s slender form was
to be seen upon the white muslin curtain. So
the two men went up the gravelly walk and knocked firmly
but respectfully at the door.
They had surmised that Miss Woppit
might be asleep, but, oh, no, not she. She was
not the kind of sister to be sleeping when her brother
was in possible danger. The answer to the firm
but respectful knocking was immediate.
“Who’s there and what
do you want?” asked Miss Woppit in tremulous
tones, with her face close to the latch. There
was no mistaking the poor thing’s alarm.
“It’s only us gents,”
answered Three-fingered Hoover, “me an’
Barber Sam; did n’t you hear us serenadin’
you a minnit ago? We ’ve come to tell
you that everything ’s all right-Jim
told us to come-he told us to tell you
not to be skeered, and if you wuz skeered how we gents
should kind of hang round here to-night; be you skeered,
Miss Woppit? Your voice sounds sort o’
like you wuz.”
Having now unbolted and unlatched
and opened the door, Miss Woppit confessed that she
was indeed alarmed; the pallor of her face confirmed
that confession. Where was Jim? Had they
caught the robbers? Was there actually no possibility
of Jim’s getting shot or stabbed or hurt?
These and similar questions did the girl put to the
two men, who, true to their trust, assured the timorous
creature in well-assumed tones of confidence that
her brother could n’t get hurt, no matter how
hard he might try.
To make short of a long tale, I will
say that the result of the long parley, in which Miss
Woppit exhibited a most charming maidenly embarrassment,
was that Three-fingered Hoover and Barber Sam were
admitted to the cabin for the night. It was understood-nay,
it was explicitly set forth, that they should have
possession of the front room wherein they now stood,
while Miss Woppit was to retire to her apartment beyond,
which, according to popular fame and in very truth,
served both as a kitchen and Miss Woppit’s bedroom,
there being only two rooms in the cabin.
This front room had in it a round
table, a half-dozen chairs, a small sheet-iron stove,
and a rude kind of settee that served Jim Woppit for
a bed by night. There were some pictures hung
about on the walls-neither better nor poorer
than the pictures invariably found in the homes of
miners. There was the inevitable portrait of
John C. Fremont and the inevitable print of the pathfinder
planting his flag on the summit of Pike’s Peak;
a map of Colorado had been ingeniously invested with
an old looking-glass frame, and there were several
cheap chromos of flowers and fruit, presumably
Miss Woppit’s contributions to the art stores
of the household. Upon the centre table, which
was covered with a square green cloth, stood a large
oil lamp, whose redolence and constant spluttering
testified pathetically to its neglect. There
were two books on the table-viz., an old
“Life of Kit Carson” and a bound file of
the “Police News,” abounding, as you will
surmise, in atrocious delineations of criminal life.
We can understand that a volume of police literature
would not be out of place in the home of an executive
of the law.
Miss Woppit, though hardly reassured
by the hearty protestations of Hoover and Barber Sam
as to her brother’s security, hoped that
all would be well. With evident diffidence she
bade her guests make themselves at home; there was
plenty of wood in the box behind the stove and plenty
of oil in the tell-tale lamp; she fetched a big platter
of crackers, a mammoth cut of cheese, a can of cove
oysters, and a noble supply of condiments. Did
the gents reckon they would be comfortable? The
gents smiled and bowed obsequiously, neither, however,
indulging in conversation to any marked degree, for,
as was quite natural, each felt in the presence of
his rival a certain embarrassment which we can fancy
Miss Woppit respected if she did not enjoy it.
Finally Miss Woppit retired to her
own delectable bower in the kitchen with the parting
remark that she would sleep in a sense of perfect
security; this declaration flattered her protectors,
albeit she had no sooner closed the door than she
piled the kitchen woodbox and her own small trunk
against it-a proceeding that touched Three-fingered
Hoover deeply and evoked from him a tender expression
as to the natural timidity of womankind, which sentiment
the crafty Barber Sam instantly indorsed in a tone
loud enough for the lady to hear.
It is presumed that Miss Woppit slept
that night. Following the moving of that woodbox
and that small trunk there was no sound of betrayal
if Miss Woppit did not sleep. Once the men in
the front room were startled by the woman’s
voice crying out, “Jim-oh, Jim!”
in tones of such terror as to leave no doubt that
Miss Woppit slept and dreamed frightful dreams.
The men themselves were wakeful enough;
they were there to protect a lady, and they were in
no particular derelict to that trust. Sometimes
they talked together in the hushed voices that beseem
a sick-chamber; anon they took up their music apparata
and thrummed and sawed therefrom such harmonies as
would seem likely to lull to sweeter repose the object
of their affection in the adjoining chamber beyond
the woodbox and the small trunk; the circumstance
of the robbery they discussed in discreet tones, both
agreeing that the highwaymen were as good as dead by
this time. We can fancy that the twain were
distinctly annoyed upon discovering in one corner
of the room, during their vigils, a number of Leadville
and Denver newspapers containing sonnets, poems, odes,
triolets, and such like, conspicuously marked
with blue or red pencil tracings and all aimed, in
a poetic sense, at Miss Woppit’s virgin heart.
This was the subtle work of the gifted Jake Dodsley!
This was his ingenious way of storming the citadel
of the coy maiden’s affections.
The discovery led Barber Sam to ventilate
his opinion of the crafty Dodsley, an opinion designedly
pitched in a high and stentorian key and expressive
of everything but compliment. On the contrary,
Three-fingered Hoover-a guileless man,
if ever there was one-stood bravely up for
Jake, imputing this artifice of his to a passion which
knows no ethics so far as competition is concerned.
It was true, as Hoover admitted, that poets seldom
make good husbands, but, being an exceptionally good
poet, Jake might prove also an exception in matrimony,
providing he found a wife at his time of life.
But as to the genius of the man there could be no
question; not even the poet Pabor had in all his glory
done a poem so fine as that favorite poem of Hoover’s,
which, direct from the burning types of the “Leadville
Herald,” Hoover had committed to the tablets
of his memory and was wont to repeat or sing on all
occasions to the aggrandizement of Jake Dodsley’s
fame. Gradually the trend of the discussion
led to the suggestion that Hoover sing this favorite
poem, and this he did in a soothing, soulful voice.
Barber Sam accompanying him upon that wondrous guitar.
What a picture that must have been! Even upon
the mountain-sides of that far-off West human hearts
respond tenderly to the touch of love.
That honest voice-oh, could
I hear it now! That honest face-oh,
could I see it again! And, oh, that once more
I could feel the clasp of that brave hand and the
cordial grace of that dear, noble presence!
It was in the fall of the year; the
nights were long, yet this night sped quickly.
Long before daybreak significant sounds in the back
room betokened that Miss Woppit was up and moving
around. Through the closed door and from behind
the improvised rampart of wood-box and small trunk
the young lady informed her chivalric protectors that
they might go home, prefacing this permission, however,
with a solicitous inquiry as to whether anything had
been heard from Brother Jim and his posse.
Jim Woppit and his men must have had
a hard ride of it. They did not show up in camp
until eleven o’clock that day, and a tougher-looking
outfit you never saw. They had scoured the surrounding
country with the utmost diligence, yet no trace whatever
had they discovered of the outlaws; the wretches had
disappeared so quickly, so mysteriously, that it seemed
hard to believe that they had indeed existed.
The crime, so boldly and so successfully done, was
of course the one theme of talk, of theory, and of
speculation in all that region for the conventional
period of nine days. And then it appeared to
be forgotten, or, at least, men seldom spoke of it,
and presently it came to be accepted as the popular
belief that the robbery had been committed by a gang
of desperate tramps, this theory being confirmed by
a certain exploit subsequently in the San Juan country,
an exploit wherein three desperate tramps assaulted
the triweekly road-hack, and, making off with their
booty, were ultimately taken and strung up to a convenient
tree.
Still, the reward of one thousand
dollars offered by the city government of Red Hoss
Mountain for information leading to the arrest of the
glen robbers was not withdrawn, and there were those
in the camp who quietly persevered in the belief that
the outrage had been done by parties as yet undiscovered,
if not unsuspected. Mr. Mills, the superintendent
of the Royal Victoria, had many a secret conference
with Jim Woppit, and it finally leaked out that the
cold, discriminating, and vigilant eye of eternal
justice was riveted upon Steve Barclay, the stage-driver.
Few of us suspected Steve; he was a good-natured,
inoffensive fellow; it seemed the idlest folly to
surmise that he could have been in collusion with the
highwaymen. But Mr. Mills had his own ideas on
the subject; he was a man of positive convictions,
and, having pretty nearly always demonstrated that
he was in the right, it boded ill for Steve Barclay
when Mr. Mills made up his mind that Steve must have
been concerned in one way or another in that Magpie
Glen crime.
The wooing of Miss Woppit pursued
the even tenor of its curious triple way. Wars
and rumors of wars served merely to imbue it with certain
heroic fervor. Jake Dodsley’s contributions
to the “Leadville Herald” and to Henry
Feldwisch’s Denver “Inter-Ocean,”
though still aimed at the virgin mistress of The Bower,
were pitched in a more exalted key and breathed a
spirit that defied all human dangers. What though
death confronted the poet and the brutal malice of
nocturnal marauders threatened the object of his adoration,
what, short of superhuman intervention, should prevent
the poet from baffling all hostile environments and
placing the queen of his heart securely upon his throne
beside him, etc., etc.? We all know
how the poets go it when they once get started.
The Magpie Glen affair gave Jake Dodsley a new impulse,
and marked copies of his wonderful effusions
found their way to the Woppit cabin in amazing plenty
and with exceeding frequency. In a moment of
vindictive bitterness was Barber Sam heard to intimate
that the robbery was particularly to be regretted
for having served to open the sluices of Jake Dodsley’s
poetic soul.
’T was the purest comedy, this
wooing was; through it all the finger of fate traced
a deep line of pathos. The poetic Dodsley, with
his inexhaustible fund of rhyme, of optimism and of
subtlety; Barber Sam, with his envy, his jealousy,
and his garrulity; Three-fingered Hoover with his
manly yearning, timorousness, tenderness, and awkwardness-these
three in a seemingly vain quest of love reciprocated;
the girl, fair, lonely, dutiful-filled
with devotion to her brother and striving, amid it
all, to preserve a proper womanly neutrality toward
these other men; there was in this little comedy among
those distant hills so much of real pathos.
As for Jim Woppit, he showed not the
slightest partiality toward any one of the three suitors;
with all he was upon terms of equal friendship.
It seemed as if Jim had made up his mind in the beginning
to let the best one win; it was a free, fair, square
race, so far as Jim was concerned, and that was why
Jim always had stanch backers in Jake Dodsley, Barber
Sam, and Three-fingered Hoover.
My sympathies were all with Hoover;
he and I were pardners. He loved the girl in
his own beautiful, awkward way. He seldom spoke
of her to me, for he was not the man to unfold what
his heart treasured. He was not an envious man,
yet sometimes he would tell how he regretted that early
education had not fallen to his lot, for in that case
he, too, might have been a poet. Mother-the
old red fiddle-was his solace. Coming
home to our cabin late of nights I’d hear him
within scraping away at that tune De Blanc had written
for him, and he believed what Mother sung to him in
her squeaky voice of the deathlessness of true love.
And many a time-I can tell it now-many
a time in the dead of night I have known him to steal
out of the cabin with Mother and go up the main road
to the gateway of The Bower, where, in moonlight or
in darkness (it mattered not to him), he would repeat
over and over again that melancholy tune, hoping thereby
to touch the sensibilities of the lady of his heart.
In the early part of February there
was a second robbery. This time the stage was
overhauled at Lone Pine, a ranch five miles beyond
the camp. The details of this affair were similar
to those of the previous business in the glen.
A masked man sprang from the roadside, presented two
revolvers at Steve Barclay’s head, and called
upon all within the stage to come out, holding up
their hands. The outrage was successfully carried
out, but the booty was inconsiderable, somewhat less
than eight hundred dollars falling into the highwayman’s
hands. The robber and his pals fled as before;
the time that elapsed before word could be got to
camp facilitated the escape of the outlaws.
A two days’ scouring of the
surrounding country revealed absolutely no sign or
trace of the fugitives. But it was pretty evident
now that the two crimes had been committed by a gang
intimately acquainted with, if not actually living
in, the locality. Confirmation of this was had
when five weeks later the stage was again stopped
and robbed at Lone Pine under conditions exactly corresponding
with the second robbery. The mystery baffled
the wits of all. Intense excitement prevailed;
a reward of five thousand dollars was advertised for
the apprehension of the outlaws; the camp fairly seethed
with rage, and the mining country for miles around
was stirred by a determination to hunt out and kill
the miscreants. Detectives came from Denver
and snooped around. Everybody bought extra guns
and laid in a further supply of ammunition. Yet
the stage robbers-bless you! nobody could
find hide or hair of ’em.
Miss Woppit stood her share of the
excitement and alarm as long as she could, and then
she spoke her mind to Jim. He told us about it.
Miss Woppit owed a certain duty to Jim, she said;
was it not enough for her to be worried almost to
death with fears for his safety as marshal of the
camp? Was it fair that in addition to this haunting
terror she should be constantly harassed by a consciousness
of her own personal danger? She was a woman
and alone in a cabin some distance from any other habitation;
one crime had been committed within a step of that
isolated cabin; what further crime might not be attempted
by the miscreants?
“The girl is skeered,”
said Jim Woppit, “and I don’t know that
I wonder at it. Women folks is nervous-like,
anyhow, and these doings of late hev been enough to
worrit the strongest of us men.”
“Why, there ain’t an hour
in the day,” testified Casey, “that Miss
Woppit don’t telephone down here to ask whether
everything is all right, and whether Jim is O. K.”
“I know it,” said Jim.
“The girl is skeered, and I ’d oughter
thought of it before. I must bring her down
into the camp to live. Jest ez soon ez I can
git the lumber I ’ll put up a cabin on the Bush
lot next to the bank.”
Jim owned the Bush lot, as it was
called. He had talked about building a store
there in the spring, but we all applauded this sudden
determination to put up a cabin instead, a home for
his sister. That was a determination that bespoke
a thoughtfulness and a tenderness that ennobled Jim
Woppit in our opinions. It was the square thing.
Barber Sam, ever fertile in suggestion,
allowed that it might be a pious idea for Miss Woppit
to move down to the Mears House and board there until
the new cabin was built. Possibly the circumstance
that Barber Sam himself boarded at the Mears House
did not inspire this suggestion. At any rate,
the suggestion seemed a good one, but Jim duly reported
that his sister thought it better to stay in the old
place till the new place was ready; she had stuck
it out so far, and she would try to stick it out the
little while longer yet required.
This ultimatum must have interrupted
the serenity of Barber Sam’s temper; he broke
his E string that evening, and half an hour later somebody
sat down on the guitar and cracked it irremediably.
And now again it was spring.
Nothing can keep away the change in the season.
In the mountain country the change comes swiftly,
unheralded. One day it was bleak and cheerless;
the next day brought with it the grace of sunshine
and warmth; as if by magic, verdure began to deck the
hillsides, and we heard again the cheerful murmur of
waters in the gulch. The hollyhocks about The
Bower shot up once more and put forth their honest,
rugged leaves. In this divine springtime, who
could think evil, who do it?
Sir Charles Lackington, president
of the Royal Victoria mine, was now due at the camp.
He represented the English syndicate that owned the
large property. Ill health compelled him to
live at Colorado Springs. Once a year he visited
Red Hoss Mountain, and always in May. It was
announced that he would come to the camp by Tuesday’s
stage. That stage was robbed by that mysterious
outlaw and his gang. But Sir Charles happened
not to be among the passengers.
This robbery (the fourth altogether)
took place at a point midway between Lone Pine and
the glen. The highwayman darted upon the leading
horses as they were descending the hill and so misdirected
their course that the coach was overturned in the
brush at the roadside. In the fall Steve Barclay’s
right arm was broken. With consummate coolness
the highwayman (now positively described as a thick-set
man, with a beard) proceeded to relieve his victims
of their valuables, but not until he had called, as
was his wont, to his confederates in ambush to keep
the passengers covered with their rifles. The
outlaw inquired which of his victims was Sir Charles
Lackington, and evinced rage when he learned that that
gentleman was not among the passengers by coach.
It happened that Jake Dodsley was
one of the victims of the highwayman’s greed.
He had been to Denver and was bringing home a pair
of elaborate gold earrings which he intended for-for
Miss Woppit, of course. Poets have deeper and
stronger feelings than common folk. Jake Dodsley’s
poetic nature rebelled when he found himself deprived
of those lovely baubles intended for the idol of his
heart. So, no sooner had the outlaw retreated
to the brush than Jake Dodsley whipped out his gun
and took to the same brush, bent upon an encounter
with his despoiler. Poor Jake never came from
the brush alive. The rest heard the report of
a rifle shot, and when, some time later, they found
Jake, he was dead, with a rifle ball in his head.
The first murder done and the fourth
robbery! Yet the mystery was as insoluble as
ever. Of what avail was the rage of eight hundred
miners, the sagacity of the indefatigable officers
of the law, and the united efforts of the vengeance-breathing
population throughout the country round about to hunt
the murderers down? Why, it seemed as if the
devil himself were holding justice up to ridicule
and scorn.
We had the funeral next day.
Sir Charles Lackington came by private wagon in the
morning; his daughter was with him. Their escape
from participation in the affair of the previous day
naturally filled them with thanksgiving, yet did not
abate their sympathy for the rest of us in our mourning
over the dead poet. Sir Charles was the first
to suggest a fund for a monument to poor Jake, and
he headed the subscription list with one hundred dollars,
cash down. A noble funeral it was; everybody
cried; at the grave Three-fingered Hoover recited the
poem about true love and Jim Woppit threw in a wreath
of hollyhock leaves which his sister had sent-the
poor thing was too sick to come herself. She
must have cared more for Jake than she had ever let
on, for she took to her bed when she heard that he
was dead.
Amid the deepest excitement further
schemes for the apprehension of the criminals who
had so long baffled detection were set on foot and-but
this is not a story of crime; it is the story of a
wooing, and I must not suffer myself to be drawn away
from the narrative of that wooing. With the
death of the poet Dodsley one actor fell out of the
little comedy. And yet another stepped in at
once. You would hardly guess who it was-Mary
Lackington. This seventeen-year-old girl favored
her father in personal appearance and character; she
was of the English type of blonde beauty-a
light-hearted, good-hearted, sympathetic creature who
recognized it as her paramount duty to minister to
her invalid father. He had been her instructor
in books, he had conducted her education, he had directed
her amusements, he had been her associate-in
short, father and daughter were companions, and from
that sweet companionship both derived a solace and
wisdom precious above all things else. Mary
Lackington was, perhaps, in some particulars mature
beyond her years; the sweetness, the simplicity, and
the guilelessness of her character was the sweetness,
the simplicity, and the guilelessness of childhood.
Fair and innocent, this womanly maiden came into
the comedy of that mountain wooing.
Three-fingered Hoover had never been
regarded an artful man, but now, all at once, for
the first time in his life, he practised a subtlety.
He became acquainted with Mary Lackington; I am not
sure that he did not meet Sir Charles at the firemen’s
muster in Pueblo some years before. Getting acquainted
with Miss Mary was no hard thing; the girl flitted
whithersoever she pleased, and she enjoyed chatting
with the miners, whom she found charmingly fresh,
original, and manly, and as for the miners, they simply
adored Miss Mary. Sir Charles owed his popularity
largely to his winsome daughter.
Mary was not long in discovering that
Three-fingered Hoover had a little romance all of
his own. Maybe some of the other boys told her
about it. At any rate, Mary was charmed, and
without hesitation she commanded Hoover to confess
all. How the big, awkward fellow ever got through
with it I for my part can’t imagine, but tell
her he did-yes, he fairly unbosomed his
secret, and Mary was still more delighted and laughed
and declared that it was the loveliest love story
she had ever heard. Right here was where Hoover’s
first and only subtlety came in.
“And now, Miss Mary,”
says he, “you can do me a good turn, and I hope
you will do it. Get acquainted with the lady
and work it up with her for me. Tell her that
you know-not that I told you, but that you
happen to have found it out, that I like her-like
her better ’n anybody else; that I ’m
the pure stuff; that if anybody ties to me they can
find me thar every time and can bet their last case
on me! Don’t lay it on too thick, but
sort of let on I ’m O. K. You women understand
such things-if you ’ll help me locate
this claim I ’m sure everything ’ll pan
out all right; will ye?”
The bare thought of promoting a love
affair set Mary nearly wild with enthusiasm.
She had read of experiences of this kind, but of course
she had never participated in any. She accepted
the commission gayly yet earnestly. She would
seek Miss Woppit at once, and she would be so discreet
in her tactics-yes, she would be as artful
as the most skilled diplomat at the court of love.
Had she met Miss Woppit? Yes,
and then again no. She had been rambling in
the glen yesterday and, coming down the road, had stopped
near the pathway leading to The Bower to pick a wild
flower of exceeding brilliancy. About to resume
her course to camp she became aware that another stood
near her. A woman, having passed noiselessly
from the cabin, stood in the gravelly pathway looking
upon the girl with an expression wholly indefinable.
The woman was young, perhaps twenty; she was tall
and of symmetrical form, though rather stout; her face
was comely, perchance a bit masculine in its strength
of features, and the eyes were shy, but of swift and
certain glance, as if instantaneously they read through
and through the object upon which they rested.
“You frightened me,” said
Mary Lackington, and she had been startled, truly;
“I did not hear you coming, and so I was frightened
when I saw you standing there.”
To this explanation the apparition
made no answer, but continued to regard Mary steadfastly
with the indefinable look-an expression
partly of admiration, partly of distrust, partly of
appeal, perhaps. Mary Lackington grew nervous;
she did therefore the most sensible thing she could
have done under the circumstances-she proceeded
on her way homeward.
This, then, was Mary’s first
meeting with Miss Woppit. Not particularly encouraging
to a renewal of the acquaintance; yet now that Mary
had so delicate and so important a mission to execute
she burned to know more of the lonely creature on
that hill side, and she accepted with enthusiasm,
as I have said, the charge committed to her by the
enamored Hoover.
Sir Charles and his daughter remained
at the camp about three weeks. In that time
Mary became friendly with Miss Woppit, as intimate,
in fact, as it was possible for anybody to become
with her. Mary found herself drawn strangely
and inexplicably toward the woman. The fascination
which Miss Woppit exercised over her was altogether
new to Mary; here was a woman of lowly birth and in
lowly circumstances, illiterate, neglected, lonely,
yet possessing a charm-an indefinable charm
which was distinct and potent, yet not to be analyzed-yes,
hardly recognizable by any process of cool mental
dissection, but magically persuasive in the subtlety
of its presence and influence. Mary had sought
to locate, to diagnose that charm; did it lie in her
sympathy with the woman’s lonely lot, or was
it the romance of the wooing, or was it the fascination
of those restless, searching eyes that Mary so often
looked up to find fixed upon her with an expression
she could not forget and could not define?
I incline to the belief that all these
things combined to constitute the charm whereof I
speak. Miss Woppit had not the beauty that would
be likely to attract one other own sex; she had none
of the sprightliness and wit of womankind, and she
seemed to be wholly unacquainted with the little arts,
accomplishments and vanities in which women invariably
find amusement. She was simply a strange, lonely
creature who had accepted valorously her duty to minister
to the comfort of her brother; the circumstances of
her wooing invested her name and her lot with a certain
pleasing romance; she was a woman, she was loyal to
her sense of duty, and she was, to a greater degree
than most women, a martyr-herein, perhaps,
lay the secret to the fascination Miss Woppit had for
Mary Lackington.
At any rate, Mary and Miss Woppit
became, to all appearances, fast friends; the wooing
of Miss Woppit progressed apace, and the mystery of
those Red Hoss Mountain crimes became more and-but
I have already declared myself upon that point
and I shall say no more thereof except so far as bears
directly upon my story, which is, I repeat, of a wooing,
and not of crime.
Three-fingered Hoover had every confidence
in the ultimate success of the scheme to which Miss
Mary had become an enthusiastic party. In occasional
pessimistic moods he found himself compelled to confess
to himself that the reports made by Miss Mary were
not altogether such as would inspire enthusiasm in
the bosom of a man less optimistic than he-Hoover-was.
To tell the truth, Mary found the
task of doing Hoover’s courting for him much
more difficult than she had ever fancied a task of
that kind could be. In spite of her unacquaintance
with the artifices of the world Miss Woppit exhibited
the daintiest skill at turning the drift of the conversation
whenever, by the most studied tact, Mary Lackington
succeeded in bringing the conversation around to a
point where the virtues of Three-fingered Hoover,
as a candidate for Miss Woppit’s esteem, could
be expatiated upon. From what Miss Woppit implied
rather than said, Mary took it that Miss Woppit esteemed
Mr. Hoover highly as a gentleman and as a friend-that
she perhaps valued his friendship more than she did
that of any other man in the world, always excepting
her brother Jim, of course.
Miss Mary reported all this to Hoover
much more gracefully than I have put it, for, being
a woman, her sympathies would naturally exhibit themselves
with peculiar tenderness when conveying to a lover
certain information touching his inamorata.
There were two subjects upon which
Miss Woppit seemed to love to hear Mary talk.
One was Mary herself and the other was Jim Woppit.
Mary regarded this as being very natural. Why
should n’t this women in exile pine to hear
of the gay, beautiful world outside her pent horizon?
So Mary told her all about the sights she had seen,
the places she had been to, the people she had met,
the books she had read, the dresses she-but,
no, Miss Woppit cared nothing for that kind of gossip-now
you ’ll agree that she was a remarkable woman,
not to want to hear all about the lovely dresses Mary
had seen and could describe so eloquently.
Then again, as to Jim, was n’t
it natural that Miss Woppit, fairly wrapped up in
that brother, should be anxious to hear the good opinion
that other folk had of him? Did the miners like
Jim, she asked-what did they say, and what
did Sir Charles say? Miss Woppit was fertile
in questionings of this kind, and Mary made satisfactory
answers, for she was sure that everybody liked Jim,
and as for her father, why, he had taken Jim right
into his confidence the day he came to the camp.
Sir Charles had indeed made a confidant
of Jim. One day he called him into his room
at the Mears House. “Mr. City Marshal,”
said Sir Charles, in atone that implied secrecy, “I
have given it out that I shall leave the camp for
home day after to-morrow.”
“Yes, I had heerd talk,”
answered Jim Woppit. “You are going by
the stage.”
“Certainly, by the stage,”
said Sir Charles, “but not day after
to-morrow; I go to-morrow.”
“To-morrow, sir?”
“To-morrow,” repeated
Sir Charles. “The coach leaves here, as
I am told, at eleven o’ clock. At four
we shall arrive at Wolcott Siding, there to catch
the down express, barring delay. I say ‘barring
delay,’ and it is with a view to evading the
probability of delay that I have given out that I
am to leave on a certain day, whereas, in fact, I shall
leave a day earlier. You understand?”
“You bet I do,” said Jim.
“You are afraid of-of the robbers?”
“I shall have some money with
me,” answered Sir Charles, “but that alone
does not make me desirous of eluding the highwaymen.
My daughter-a fright of that kind might
lead to the most disastrous results.”
“Correct,” said Jim.
“So I have planned this secret
departure,” continued Sir Charles. “No
one in the camp now knows of it but you and me, and
I have a favor-a distinct favor-to
ask of you in pursuance of this plan. It is that
you and a posse of the bravest men you can pick shall
accompany the coach, or, what is perhaps better, precede
the coach by a few minutes, so as to frighten away
the outlaws in case they may happen to be lurking in
ambush.”
Jim signified his hearty approval
of the proposition. He even expressed a fervent
hope that a rencontre with the outlaws might transpire,
and then he muttered a cordial “d -
’em!”
“In order, however,” suggested
Sir Charles, “to avert suspicion here in camp
it would be wise for your men to meet quietly at some
obscure point and ride together, not along the main
road, but around the mountain by the Tin Cup path,
coming in on the main road this side of Lone Pine
ranch. You should await our arrival, and then,
everything being tranquil, your posse can precede
us as an advance guard in accordance with my previous
suggestion.”
“It might be a pious idea,”
said Jim, “for me to give the boys a pointer.
They ’ll be on to it, anyhow, and I know ’em
well enough to trust ’em.”
“You know your men; do as you
please about apprising them of their errand,”
said Sir Charles. “I have only to request
that you assure each that he will be well rewarded
for his services.”
This makes a rude break in our wooing;
but I am narrating actual happenings. Poor old
Hoover’s subtlety all for naught, Mary’s
friendly offices incompleted, the pleasant visits
to the cabin among the hollyhocks suspended perhaps
forever, Miss Woppit’s lonely lot rendered still
more lonely by the departure of her sweet girl friend-all
this was threatened by the proposed flight-for
flight it was-of Sir Charles and Mary Lackington.
That May morning was a glorious one.
Summer seemed to have burst upon the camp and the
noble mountain-sentinels about it.
“We are going to-day,”
said Sir Charles to his daughter. “Hush!
not a word about it to anybody. I have reasons
for wishing our departure to be secret.”
“You have heard bad news?” asked Mary,
quickly.
“Not at all,” answered
Sir Charles, smilingly. “There is absolutely
no cause for alarm. We must go quietly; when
we reach home I will tell you my reasons and then
we will have a hearty laugh together.”
Mary Lackington set about packing
her effects, and all the time her thoughts were of
her lonely friend in the hill-side cabin. In
this hour of her departure she felt herself drawn
even more strangely and tenderly toward that weird,
incomprehensible creature; such a tugging at her heart
the girl had never experienced till now. What
would Miss Woppit say-what would she think?
The thought of going away with never so much as a
good-by struck Mary Lackington as being a wanton piece
of heartlessness. But she would write to Miss
Woppit as soon as ever she reached home-she
would write a letter that would banish every suspicion
of unfeelingness.
Then, too, Mary thought of Hoover;
what would the big, honest fellow think, to find himself
deserted in this emergency without a word of warning?
Altogether it was very dreadful. But Mary Lackington
was a daughter who did her father’s bidding
trustingly.
Three-fingered Hoover went with Jim
Woppit that day. There were thirteen in the
posse-fatal number-mounted on
sturdy bronchos and armed to the teeth. They
knew their business and they went gayly on their way.
Around the mountain and over the Tin Cup path they
galloped, a good seven miles, I ’ll dare swear;
and now at last they met up with the main road, and
at Jim Woppit’s command they drew in under the
trees to await the approach of the party in the stage.
Meanwhile in camp the comedy was drawing
to a close. Bill Merridew drove stage that day;
he was Steve Barclay’s pardner-pretty
near the only man in camp that stood out for Steve
when he was suspicioned of being in some sort of cahoots
with the robbers. Steve Barclay’s arm was
still useless and Bill was reckoned the next best
horseman in the world.
The stage drew up in front of the
Mears House. Perhaps half a dozen passengers
were in waiting and the usual bevy of idlers was there
to watch the departure. Great was the astonishment
when Sir Charles and Mary Lackington appeared and
stepped into the coach. Everybody knew Sir Charles
and his daughter, and, as I have told you, it had been
given out that they were not to leave the camp until
the morrow. Forthwith there passed around mysterious
whisperings as to the cause of Sir Charles’
sudden departure.
It must have been a whim on Barber
Sam’s part. At any rate, he issued just
then from Casey’s restaurant across the way,
jaunty and chipper as ever. He saw Sir Charles
in the stage and Bill Merridew on the box. He
gave a low, significant whistle. Then he crossed
the road.
“Bill,” says he, quietly,
“It ‘s a summerish day, and not feelin’
just as pert as I oughter I reckon I ’ll ride
a right smart piece with you for my health!”
With these words Barber Sam climbed
up and sat upon the box with Bill Merridew.
A moment later the stage was on its course along the
main road.
“Look a’ here, Bill Merridew,”
says Barber Sam, fiercely, “there ’s a
lord inside and you outside, to-day-a mighty
suspicious coincidence! No, you need n’t
let on you don’t tumble to my meenin’!
I ’ve had my eye on Steve Barclay an’
you, and I ’m ready for a showdown. I ‘m
travelin’ for my health to-day, and so are you,
Bill Merridew! I ’m fixed from the ground
up an’ you know there ain’t a man in the
Red Hoss Mountain country that is handier with a gun
than me. Now I mean bizness; if there is any
onpleasantness to-day and if you try to come any funny
bizness, why, d - me, Bill Merridew,
if I don’t blow your head off!”
Pleasant words these for Bill to listen
to. But Bill knew Barber Sam and he had presence
of mind enough to couch his expostulatory reply in
the most obsequious terms. He protested against
Barber Sam’s harsh imputations.
“I ‘ve had my say,”
was Barber Sam’s answer. “I ain’t
goin’ to rub it in. You understand that
I mean bizness this trip; so don’t forget it.
Now let’s talk about the weather.”
Mary Lackington had hoped that, as
they passed The Bower, she would catch a glimpse of
Miss Woppit-perhaps have sufficient opportunity
to call out a hasty farewell to her. But Miss
Woppit was nowhere to be seen. The little door
of the cabin was open, so presumably the mistress was
not far away. Mary was disappointed, vexed;
she threw herself back and resigned herself to indignant
reflections.
The stage had proceeded perhaps four
miles on its way when its progress was arrested by
the sudden appearance of a man, whose habit and gestures
threatened evil. This stranger was of short and
chunky build and he was clad in stout, dark garments
that fitted him snugly. A slouch hat was pulled
down over his head and a half-mask of brown muslin
concealed the features of his face. He held
out two murderous pistols and in a sharp voice cried
“Halt!” Instantaneously Barber Sam recognized
in this bold figure the mysterious outlaw who for
so many months had been the terror of the district,
and instinctively he reached for his pistol-pocket.
“Throw up your hands!”
commanded the outlaw. He had the drop on them.
Recalling poor Jake Dodsley’s fate Barber Sam
discreetly did as he was bidden. As for Bill
Merridew, he was shaking like a wine-jelly. The
horses had come to a stand, and the passengers in the
coach were wondering why a stop had been made so soon.
Wholly unaware of what had happened, Mary Lackington
thrust her head from the door window of the coach
and looked forward up the road, in the direction of
the threatening outlaw. She comprehended the
situation at once and with a scream fell back into
her father’s arms.
Presumably, the unexpected discovery
of a woman among the number of his intended victims
disconcerted the ruffian. At any rate, he stepped
back a pace or two and for a moment lowered his weapons.
That moment was fatal to him. Quick as lightning
Barber Sam whipped out his unerring revolver and fired.
The outlaw fell like a lump of dough in the road.
At that instant Bill Merridew recovered his wits; gathering
up the lines and laying on the whip mercilessly he
urged his horses into a gallop. Over the body
of the outlaw crunched the hoofs of the frightened
brutes and rumbled the wheels of the heavy stage.
“We ’ve got him this
time!” yelled Barber Sam, wildly. “Stop
your horses, Bill-you ’re all right,
Bill, and I ’m sorry I ever did you dirt-stop
your horses, and let ‘s finish the sneakin’
critter!”
There was the greatest excitement.
The passengers fairly fell out of the coach, and
it seemed as if they had an arsenal with them.
Mary Lackington was as self-possessed as any of the
rest.
“Are you sure he is dead?”
she asked. “Don’t let us go nearer
till we know that he is dead; he will surely kill
us!”
The gamest man in the world would
n’t have stood the ghost of a show in the face
of those murderous weapons now brought to bear on the
fallen and crushed wretch.
“If he ain’t dead already
he ’s so near it that there ain’t no fun
in it,” said Bill Merridew.
In spite of this assurance, however,
the party advanced cautiously toward the man.
Convinced finally that there was no longer cause for
alarm, Barber Sam strode boldly up to the body, bent
over it, tore off the hat and pulled aside the muslin
half-mask. One swift glance at the outlaw’s
face, and Barber Sam recoiled.
“Great God!” he cried, “Miss Woppit!”
It was, indeed, Miss Woppit-the
fair-haired, shy-eyed boy who for months had masqueraded
in the camp as a woman. Now, that masquerade
disclosed and the dreadful mystery of the past revealed,
the nameless boy, fair in spite of his crimes and
his hideous wounds, lay dying in the dust and gravel
of the road.
Jim Woppit and his posse, a mile away,
had heard the pistol-shot. It seemed but a moment
ere they swept down the road to the scene of the tragedy;
they came with the swiftness of the wind. Jim
Woppit galloped ahead, his swarthy face the picture
of terror.
“Who is it-who ’s killed-who
’s hurt?” he asked.
Nobody made answer, and that meant
everything to Jim. He leapt from his horse,
crept to the dying boy’s side and took the bruised
head into his lap. The yellowish hair had fallen
down about the shoulders; Jim stroked it and spoke
to the white face, repeating “Willie, Willie,
Willie,” over and over again.
The presence and the voice of that
evil brother, whom he had so bravely served, seemed
to arrest the offices of Death. The boy came
slowly to, opened his eyes and saw Jim Woppit there.
There was pathos, not reproach, in the dying eyes.
“It ’s all up, Jim,”
said the boy, faintly, “I did the best I could.”
All that Jim Woppit could answer was
“Willie, Willie, Willie,” over and over
again.
“This was to have been the last
and we were going away to be decent folks,”
this was what the boy went on to say; “I wish
it could have been so, for I have wanted to live ever
since-ever since I knew her.”
Mary Lackington gave a great moan.
She stood a way off, but she heard these words and
they revealed much-so very much to her-more,
perhaps, than you and I can guess.
He did not speak her name. The
boy seemed not to know that she was there. He
said no other word, but with Jim Woppit bending over
him and wailing that piteous “Willie, Willie,
Willie,” over and over again, the boy closed
his eyes and was dead.
Then they all looked upon Jim Woppit,
but no one spoke. If words were to be said,
it was Jim Woppit’s place to say them, and that
dreadful silence seemed to cry: “Speak
out, Jim Woppit, for your last hour has come!”
Jim Woppit was no coward. He
stood erect before them all and plucked from his breast
the star of his office and cast away from him the weapon
he had worn. He was magnificent in that last,
evil hour!
“Men,” said he.
“I speak for him an’ not for myself.
Ez God is my judge, that boy wuz not to blame.
I made him do it all-the lyin’, the
robbery, the murder; he done it because I told him
to, an’ because havin’ begun he tried
to save me. Why, he wuz a kid ez innocent ez
a leetle toddlin’ child. He wanted to
go away from here an’ be different from wot
he wuz, but I kep’ at him an’ made him
do an’ do agin wot has brought the end to-day.
Las’ night he cried when I told him he must
do the stage this mornin; seemed like he wuz soft
on the girl yonder. It wuz to have been the
las’ time-I promised him that, an’
so-an’ so it is. Men, you ‘ll
find the money an’ everything else in the cabin-under
the floor of the cabin. Make it ez square all
round ez you kin.”
Then Jim Woppit backed a space away,
and, before the rest could realize what he was about,
he turned, darted through the narrow thicket, and
hurled himself into the gulch, seven hundred feet down.
But the May sunlight was sweet and
gracious, and there lay the dead boy, caressed of
that charity of nature and smiling in its glory.
Bill was the first to speak-Bill
Merridew, I mean. He was Steve Barclay’s
partner and both had been wronged most grievously.
“Now throw the other one over,
too,” cried Bill, savagely. “Let
’em both rot in the gulch!”
But a braver, kindlier man said “No!”
It was Three-fingered Hoover, who came forward now
and knelt beside the dead boy and held the white face
between his hard, brown hands and smoothed the yellowish
hair and looked with unspeakable tenderness upon the
closed eyes.
“Leave her to me,” said
he, reverently. “It wuz ez near ez I ever
come to lovin’ a woman, and I reckon it’s
ez near ez I ever shell come. So let
me do with her ez pleases me.”
It was their will to let Three-fingered
Hoover have his way. With exceeding tenderness
he bore the body back to camp and he gave it into
the hands of womenfolk to prepare it for burial, that
no man’s touch should profane that vestige of
his love. You see he chose to think of her to
the last as she had seemed to him in life.
And it was another conceit of his
to put over the grave, among the hollyhocks on that
mountain-side, a shaft of pure white marble bearing
simply the words “Miss Woppit.”